Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 13, 1920, Page 13

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We cannot always find the ways. That lead to waiting treasures; There must sometimes be dismal-days That are’devoid of pleasures; The winds that blow so softly now Tomorrow may be bitter; -The storms will' come, but, anyhow, Don’t be a quitter. - - We cannot always do the things We wish we might be doing; We may not all be dukes or kings, Some men. must do the hewing; Some men must plow and some must sow, While some in jewels glitter, But, if your place is high or low, Don’t be a quitter. Some men may live in idleness On fortunes they inherit, And some men never may possess The sweet rewards of merit; Some men may ride in lordly state, While others bear the litter; - But, rich or poor, or small or grea:, Don’t be a quitter. ’ - You cannot win by sitting in Your corner, -sighing gravely; : Inflate your chest, thrust out your chin, And do your duty bravely; You may have cause to be in doubt, Your hardships may be bitter, But never let the world find out— Don’t be a quitter. —S. E. Kiser in the Chicago Record-Herald. A u'ei?hbor who has better means than I for learning the sentiment of farmers generally’ in this vieinity tells me that the discouragement and disgust over labor conditions, which have been growing worse for several years, has now reached almost the breaking point. In 1817 and 1918 farmers abouts, -in common with those -of practically all other parts of the country, 'worked- like galley slaves to bring about a bumper production. They did this in answer to appeals and exhortations and promisks . un- numbered from the government at Washington. They did it less in the hope of profit than for the sake of patriotism. They drew heavily om| here-| heavily on their own strength. They took a gait which nobody . could maintain for any length of time or except under the stimulus of a pressing emergency. As a result, in those two years they turned over a great output. Last year—I1819—the war being: vie- toriously over and the patriotic duty of selm-immolation removed, they sought to take up their normal and before-the-war gait. Very speedily they found it could not be done. { Tor their formal work they re- quired a certain amount of help in the form of hired labor. i bor was, for most of them, as com- pletely out of reach as the moon. It wasn’'t to be had for any wages which any possible triumph of farm produc- tion could pay. So we doddering old chaps had to untangle the kinks in ! eration October 17 by HUMOR OF THE DAY De Style—Are they strong for pro- hibition in your town? ing Alphonso. The Compania Metropolitano _ Alfon- 0 XIIL has a capital of 10,000000 pe- i setas (§1,930,000 at normal exchange) our aching old backs, spit on our gnarled old hands ,straighten up our stiff old legs and do the best we could with the oild team. Sometimes we hag to beg the help of the old (Written Specially for The Bulletin)| their farm reserves and still more] ‘others. And any la-| _T have read that, in one big ship- , every man who applied for york was taken on at almest any wage he chose to ask, utterly regard- less of his value or of the need for him. He might not ever have seen a strake from a 7. he ired. Often he Was hired as an k- ship-carpenter at an - expert's y,“flnu‘h e had never '.t”s:&g side of a shipyard before. ¥ that hundreds if not thousands of Such .men day after day, doing no work. asked to-do no work, i e of doing work, Just gel in each way—and drawing their big pay. Yet the government not only stood that sert of thing, P actively to have encouraged it, The result was neot only a veritable orgy | of money-wasting, it was the devel opment of a deplorably effective dev- i's normai school in the art of get- ting unearned pay or prefit. Not only were those directly invelved un- fitted for future usefulness at real work, but the news of their “graft” spread from Maine of Oregon and in- fected hundreds of thousands of Of course, the men who, week after week, drew and “pocketed their un- earned or only partly earmed pay ‘were just as truly “profiteers” as the employers who used them to swell their own incomes. It won't whitep either one to have the pot call the kettle black. But, human nature be- ing the rotted mixture that it admit- tedly is, ’whnt. else wag to have been ed ? Naturally, men who got $5 or 38 or $10 a day.for doing next to nothing, are now and always will conginue fo be hankering after more of the”same pudding. What can -farm around in the ynrdl_l' but appears | e v ‘Men’s Sweaters . Boys’ Knee Pants, tures—all [ SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14th, ONLY | pair M Jool-Mixed Hose ............... D T T S P Y Men’s Blue Chambray Shirts. ... .. .. Men’s Khaki Shirts ... ... Men’s Black and White Striped Shirts . ... Men’s Caps—value §1 : Boys’ Caps—value $1.50 Boys’ “Mayo” Union Suits .. ... ...... h Boys’ Straight Knee Pants, in Corduroy and mix- REMEMBER——These Specials are for Saturday, February 14th, ONLY. Come early to assure yourself of the best selections. ' THE NORWICH BARGAIN H aa bes amae ese e T e S D e PP in Corduroys, Serges an mix- ‘see s st eenese aeisToielels R SO D R TR S S S T S P P T e s e ee s e ettt e et ettt $1.00 OUSE ‘MORE FOR LESS” ’ Gunbusta—Oh yes; a man is liable!and plans to construct three appeal to be arrested for making a wry face. —Judge. “What ought 1 to do,” asked the spectacled _tourist. “if I should acci- dentally learn of the existence in this region of an illicit still?” “Keep still,” replied Jig Fiddlin, of Sapdy Mush, Axk—Juq:e. The Comedian—That other subway lines in the city of Madrid. Samuel Miller started at 10 o’clock | Friday morning to walk from Col- | gate Seminary, New York, where he {is studying for the Baptist minis- try, to his home in Westmont, N. J,, 380 miles away, where he arrived at 7 o'clock Saturday night. He got many automobile lifts that he walked only lady to lead the horse or pull the weeds, or drive the cows. It was mighty hard sledding, all ‘round, when" done without the spur of urgent necessity. Nor was it emi- nently successful. The production of all sorts of farm crops in my neighborhood was less in 1919 that for .many previous & 3to 7 Water Street, Washington Square, Norwich, Conn work, “at farm wages, have for them? Or for the millions of others Who, havipg heard of it, want to share in similar graft? And it allf started from that “‘cost plus” idea. I don’t know who the unspeaka- ble nincompoop was who adopted the System on the government's behalf. Whoever he was, I sort o' feel as if ASSIGN SINISTER MOTIVES TO LABOR LEADERS Utica, N. Y., Feb. 12.—Charges that behind the announced plan f the 3 culation from $1,2000,000,000 in 1914 to $12,400,000,000 at the close of the war, and $18,770,000,000 in December 1919, the gold reserve notes declins ing from 49.7 percent in 1914 to 5.5 Cuba, the cocoa of Ecuagor, Santo Domingo and Brazil, and the wool and meats of Argentina, Uruguay and Chile. o The grand total of the international n’ rears. ~ordin; o v i he ought to be compelled to work |trade of the 20. Latin @merican re- | percent in November 1918, and 1.7 Amerlcan Federation of Lal:‘or‘ to ob- man's a cheese. The big :&;, l;aod&. about 100 miles. fi:;rosha;(;(alked g‘witth ?&ore;nfg{mr:,rlf eixhl::n hours a day for about|publics, says the Bank's s.rz.temenl,}qercent in December 1919, _T}}‘g .‘u. 'tflmrell;ge:éeci‘mgm(;)fleuu?m;‘?(Siliiflg prrg-beihs e 8 Above Nantes the Loire is little|mers, big and little, in a dozen town- | eighteen cents a week, the rest of his | thus advanced -from.about $3,000,000,- |lied group of 18 e i e | e o e, DOliEte The Soubrette—Naw, he ain't ne;used on account of the swift current | ships, it is going to be still smaller|life, trying to repair damages. Bven|000 in 1913 to nearly or quite $5,000,- | Russia up to 9“0"“‘4 19“})0 o L R e R T I R cheese. A cheese is good to eat, He's|and shifting channel. It is proposed |in 1920. For the reason that a great | then, he wouldn't live long enough te 000,000 in 1919, the exports showing |notes aggregating . $4,00,000,000 in bave grown powerful by the contripu- 2 hole in the cheese—just as rank, | to dredge the river for a considerable | many farmers have got to the end of [Suffer an adequate punishment. an increase of nearly 100 percent in 5 L4 & but nethin' te it—=St. Press. Paul Pioneer distance above Nantes or to build lat- eral canels so as to join the Loire their* tether. They lack, themselves, the physical strength and stamina to _In the meantime, there doesn’t stated value, and the imports and in- crease of about 50 percent; though it| 1914, $25,000,000,000 in November 1918, and $30,000,000,000 in December their gold reserve $3,763,000,000 have ied upon labor, overnment within a go: 1919, { 8 2 in RN Seem any way out of it for the ave- pue! 3 were made here tonight by Lallie—Yes, I am engaged to Eob-| With the canal systems of Central|keep on indefinitely doing two or|rage small New England farmer who|iS Droper to add that these incrcases 4514, e fi“z”ooigg“d na 1}‘“”-{ B¢ United States Semator Miles C. Poln- by and he has given me this ring— | France leading to Paris, and with the|three men’s work, and they cannot | can't get essential help, but to nar-in the grand-total of vales are due 17?;0" of gold olr;ris : e_clon(} ng fro *| dexter of Washington an\ Adasess bty o o Birey . |Rhone, making a waterway from (hire help at any wages within their|row the limits of his work to such!in a very eopgiderable dggree to the |76 Novembor 1918 ang 193 DerCei|yefore the Utica Republican club. Her Best Iriend—Charming, dear-| SWitzerland to the sea. possible incomes. bounds as he can attend to with his|higher prices in 1919. 3. an bo\_ember (i, oty P aeipar| “The farmers and laboring men of gst, but vou'll find when you've worn| The Fourth Swiss Sample Fair will| ~ My informant quotéd’ one farmer|own labor, assisted by such tools as| The United States, says the Bani's |in R cated - $1.166. | America.” he asserted, “have in every it a few days it will leave a little | be held in the Swiss Sample . Fair | 25 saying, in effect, that he had over|his circumstances permit him to buy.|Statement, has fared genmerously at|neutrals nam aggregate: L1686, - black mark on your finger; it did on buildings .in Basel, April 15-29, 1920. £9,000 invested in land,.stocks, tools, If this reduces production and still the hands of her Latin American isis b the great bulwark of our 000,000 of notes in 1914, and $2.420.- | CLSiS been the sre Doo! : AL 0.- | free institutions, and the- not . This exhibition has beco; insti- | 6tc.; that he worked last year from | further Sts prices he, at leagt|neighbors' during this period. Prior (000,000 in 1919, their #61d reserve in-!| follow the mistaken leadoer » which m;?;n—m_c::{l:xi_'s\:;;e anything maorel tution of St fimportance and. of | thirteen to fifteen hours a day, oix | camnet Justly be held responsible. ~ |to the war the Latin Americans yere, |creasing from $516,000,000 to $1,450,- | \coutg place the government under the difficult than “‘, tell a girl that you |iBternational interest. An official | 43¥YSs in the week, and at least six I do not know nor have I ever|as a great group, taking only about (000,000, and their ratio of gold to{ despotic contr: ‘government within love her, 1 tell you {)mt takes .cour- | Catalogue of the exhibitors is availa- | NOUrs every Sunday; and that, mev-|heard of a single farmer who really |23 percent of their total imports from |Tiotes advancing from 44;3 percent in‘ ihe government. b o o ble in advance of the opening of the | ertheless, he wasn't able to earn as|wants to restrict production. But a|the United States, while in 1918 they |1914 to 59.9 percent in 1913, Dick—Yes ,but think of the courage fair, the price being 1.50 francs plus much from his farm as the average farm can not be carried on without took from us, as nearly as can now Tni States | 5 A o B (St P ST silence “ iz 4 3 stage charges. city shop worker gets for eight hours,labor. And if labor is not to be had!be estimated, 46 percent of their |the figures supplied by the Treasury e = = i Lo b v umé }rc;lldd?e: lmAmeriea.n r;cwr vehiel . work five days a week, four hours|at wages which possible farm pro- |greatly increased jmports. Their ag. |Department show note cicuintas o (o BL ol [Ews) Ak iy, ghou ove. ;’ Hfbwu‘ s“ufn to: predomlinte. i T b P}:};P"‘?“F work Saturday, no work Sunday and|duction remder feasible, then farm|gregate imports advanced -from $1,- | $1.056,000,000 in June 1914, $3,643,000,- | the things we know. yo; a i-th nl l;;shd W_t an, ¢| market. The totalnnumger Of‘:‘r’gc"]::;nn capital invested. production must diminish. 400,000,000 in 1913 to about $2,000,- (000 in November 1918, and $£4,05l.- — ing Father—-My dear, if you wan ST B I am told of another, with a farm| Such an outcome means hardship |0 0 in 1919, Our total exports to {000,000 in December 1919, the gold & good husband, marry Mr. Good- |registered in 1918 was 567, with B{of 15001 acres, who has been 7 D 000,000 in 1 ur XD heart. He really and truly loves you. | tonnage capacity of 1,062 and a pas- | to produce milk for the eity trying | for the farmer as well ag for every- body else. Latin America_in the fiscal year 1914, reserve $1,023,000,000 in §2,107,000,- i 245 supply. But the farmer can, after |a)] of which preceded the war, were {000 in 1918, and the ratio of gold to A s f d S d Deughter—Are you sure of nmLIf;‘;‘f‘-‘;f9;’35:‘;;";:a:{;’“-meD“:eelg ‘i‘gll,ast year he was able o harvest and |all, stand it longer than most oOthers.|$283,000,000, and in the calendar year |notes 99.8 percent in 1914, 635 mer aie and Speeqy N‘l&?n-’d Father—Yes, indeed. I've been | transport agricultural products mo. | 547 1eSS than a quarter of the hay | That is a.reflection which ought to he 1919, epproximately $930,000,000. They !cent in November 1918, and 52.3 per- ing money from him for six months, and still’ he keeps coming— tor trucks are beginning to play an; impertant part in the country’s com- which was growing on the farm, be- cause he couldn’t get hands to attend commended to the attention of labor agitators. increased their imports. about $60: ent in December 1919, these figures Rheumatism Remedy : L e Ry B b Frpdr e i 3 000,000, while our exports to them in- otdno[es being rexctlusiv.;l n£ the gold i3 2 e we! 0 waste. e n.climbing after the hig apple at|creased a 650,000,000 in the same |und silver certificates which are con- Dallas News. / erce; SR has been. compelled to sell off {hree- | tHe very top of the tall tres, it 15 ox. | poeiags “0OU¢ 39 T A ered. as ~warehouse. -recefpta” For|] That Offers Two weeks,T'ea“é""‘ ~Professor Diggs has no recreations ||, o pecro o quarters of his cows from lack of | ceedingly poor judgment for the | an _equivalent amount of metal de-|f to Any Sufferer on WMoney-Back whatever, I hear." .8, ER REPGRYED forage, and will now have to sell-the climber to break out all the rounds i “You are very, much mistaken.” “Oh! What d he do to rest his| Constantinople, Tuesda: , Feb. 10.— | 2L Dresent prices receiveq for milk, is| cends. . ‘World paper currency. has, increas- | The statement in condensed form mind after hoffs of arduous study |The American destrover Talbot. was|SUUPIY equivalent fo throwing good| He may want them badly to climb |ed 600 percent since the beginning of ‘3. ")1° poyio g e e Al v SuNCers in his library?® reported today in distress mear Ser-:Money after bad, down on. the war, while the gold reserve be- | e g N R T D “He chuekles over the wheezes of Babylonian column conductors, writ- IN DISTRESS IN.BALCK SEA pent’s Island, in the Black Sea. Tt is thought, however, that the report rest or buy hay, a proceeding which, Here is the answer one of these of the ladder below him, as he as- THE FARMER. i Growth of World Paper Currency hind it has increased but 40 percent. posited with the United States Treas- Plan. Paper Circulation, Gold Reserve, and|form. Get from your druseict a pack- Ratio of Gold to Notes of 30 Prin-|age of Rbkeuma, the guaranteed ‘pre- ! The facé: yalue ‘of'"the paper cur-| ina1° Countries ‘of the World i scription. ' Use the entire bottle, and if fea on Iablets of clay."—Birmingham | may refer to the Talbot's standing by | Lot S e, DOSt office de- |, , o\ - rency of 30 principal countries of the | 100 Navmmcr i9ee N | i ot tHATk TC I Eivan, ot s % g by | partment’s questionnaire as to what ATIN AMERICAN TRADE cous 1€11914, November 1918, and December |3 prip S e o au aon Age Herald. ihe British cruiser Ceres, which is! wag the trouble with farming:— AND OUR'PART THEREIN world aggregated $7,250,000000 in 1919, (In millions of dollars). 5 ;;\5::5);(:;; et 2 o Tparts indiokts tht g TOWINE 2 tasMemimnd o tugs loadefl| " “pmo time I5 wery Memriii i ) n | L214, $40,000,000,000 af the date of the July Nov. Dec. | Isn't that a fair offer? tieally no farm machinery in Bel- | with refugees from Odessa towards) rarmers will have sy meiar o The lorelgn commerce of our Latin | Armistice, and $50,000,000,000 in De- Iy 1913 1919 | Then start the Rheuma treatment to- oy was #eiod Uuring the enemy|Donstenza Rumania, “under bad|tion and raise only what o iorS], |American nelgbors ageregated. nearly | compbers 1110 thes figures being ex- |, .. =i Sy T 1 day. It's a reputable physician's pro- oceupation. Naturally, (he machinery | Weather conditions, our own use and let the other fel. | o5 JRite 35.000,000000 in 1819 against | clusive of the $54,000.000,000 of paper | Allies S scription, altegether different from in-the devastated regions was de- | A blizzard is general over the Black lows look out- for themselves Lal:o; slightly less tban $3,000,000,000 in 1912. |issued by the Bolshevik Government. | Gold ded—free from stroyed and will have to be replaced. | Sta. 5 unions are more to blame for the| LDEIl aZgregate population is nearly | Meantime the bank deposits and con- | , pe Gold The Gemmans did sverything in their | The Russian steamer Gregoricff ran | hoig"s e mor: any one clse. People | 100:00.000, and the area of the Latin |sequent yse of checks.as a ciroulating | Cent. PowersNotes 5 pomer to encourage the farmers to | 3Shore near the Killia Jife-saving sta- | .5 trying to get pay for what the |American countries 8287,000 square|medinm ave correspondingly increas- Gold F i as large crop yields as possi- | on at the Black Sea entrance {o-ihe| dont sars. o ¥ | miles. ed and the world national debts have | .. pe Gold It should please you in a day on account of the great shortage| °SPNOTUS. One hundred and fifty of | In' confirmation of this, T read that| 1Atin American - trade during and|grownfrom $40,000,000,000 in 1914 to ! Neutrals Notes 1,16 ind me ou hopeful and happy in a Lo g her, bassengers were o e ais | the carpenters and plumbers . in | Siice the war perlad has shown &reat- | S300,000000000 1o teme! St b el e L el from the. thio b oro-inedand, | netonBosink loity are:Bolke o ditaig | o PEICTaE W ds T SEREmEnt b | ST e merir e fon oF 5. gtady | g rheumatic "‘KALEIDOSCOPE T enst."’. 2 rocket,” anfly g i thaur: ont spring. There | the National City Bank of New York; lor world currency. and indebtedness | L0 ¥ e ing would g | opurke A PmARINE Aorecne TeScUl | doosn’t geem to be ‘any reason’ npi|than that of ieet Sther/parts of the- appearing il the: Jaaussy number oe| CCunTies Notes 727 much for you From official figures, the weaith of | o 1® J7ne passengers and, ihoy shouldmt. Or why -the . black, |Beutral world. . Prior to’ the war the | The Americas issved by the Netional | GolAid et Osgood Co. w o of posnada i estimated | The Gregorieff is a 7.000-ton vessel,| STIthS and the coal-Neavers and. the|chief éxports of the 20 countrics o |LRe = | pe Gold 70.0 antee money the Domini: at abeut 317,000.000,000, the total in- cpme of citizens about $: 800,600, 3 She left Odessa on Sunday. gz(n, the aggregate wealth as $19,- 090,000 N. H. ROAD EMPLOYES TO Honolulu is to have a government auction sale, formal authorization of which has been forwarded from the treasury department to L. Tenny Pock, director of the second Liberty loan. Here is what is to be auction- ed: “One card index bex, cost $1.25. Lime No. 11 of the ‘“Metropolitano” (Madrid subway) was gpened for op- New Maintenance of Way : ] The WHIDDLE Co.; NATICK-MASS. OBEY PRESIDENT BARKER Beston, ¥Feb. 12.—Employes of the York, New Haven and Hartford railroad who are members of the local branch of the United Brotherhood of Employes ana Railway Shop Lehorers at a mestine| tonight voted unanimously to obey order of Grand President Barker eall- ing a strike for next Tuesday morning, the window-washers and \the hod-car- riers and the ditch-diggers shouldn’t “demand” the same./ Or why, if they shall get it, they may not next year “demand” $6 an hour, or temn cents a minute, or any other figure in the arithmetic. No farmer can com- pete for their labor on any such ba- s unless they, on their part, are wiliing t0 pay him at least $10 a bushel for potatoes, $50 a barrel for the wheat in their floyr, 50 cents a auart for milk, $2.50 a dozen for eggs, and so on in like proportion. Even such prices ag these are not compar- able in gouging greediness to some of the wage demands formulated by some unions. But, in justice to the unions, we must not forget or overleok the fact Jhat the prime mover and active forcer of high prices was the United States government. ‘When some unforgiving ninny in high place at Washington starteq the “cost plus” scheme during the war, ne started trouble which few living men will ever see the end of. What is the “cost plus” scheme? you ask. 'Why, it was the system a\ nted by the government during the war in the case of many of the largest industries by which the government took their product at actual cost of manufac- ture, plus an agreed on prefit, us- ually of about ten per cent. centage on the cost of manufacture, it follows that the greater the cost of manufacture the larger the profit. If, for illustration, the necessary cost of building a ship under shrewd and economical management was $1,000,- 000 then the profit, at ten per cent., would be $100,000. But if, by buying recklessly, by managing improvident- ly, and, above all, by padding pay- rolis, the cost of this same ship should be advanced to $2,000,000, then the accruing profit, at the same per- centage, would he $200,000, And that's exaetly the cheerful stunt at which “big business” in a great many cases sel itself—to dou- ble. its. own profit by doubling the book cost of its product. e e designated were curfee, cocoa, friuts, india rubber, tin, copper, nitrates, Wheat, meats, wool, and sugar. The war cut-off much of the European markets for the coffee and cocoa and fruits and rubber and tin, while on the other hand it increased European 4s well as American demands for the other products, meats, wool, sugar, copper, and nitrates. As a conse-! quence, the grand total of exports of Latin America made but very slow growth during the first half of the| war period, and the imports during that period actually declined. total exports of the 20 countries class- ed as Latin America were in 1913 $1,502,000,000; in 1914 $1,552,000,000; in 1915 $1,671,000,000; and in 1917 $1,838,000,000. Then in 1918, when the ability of Argentina, Uruguay, southern Brasil, ‘and Chile to supply meats, wool, and nitrates became ful- ly recognized, the exports jumped to $2,378,000,000, and in the first year of Peace, 1919, the continued demand for meats angd - wool, led with the great advance in prices of coffee and sugar and--cocoa, brought the grand total of Latin American exports up to. nearly or quite -$3,000,600,000, ae against $1,500,600,000 ceding the war. Thus,( says the Bank's statement, the exports of Latin America in the first _year following the war, 1919, are in the calendar 1913; e A Imperts have shown a similar flue- tuation, ‘a decline in the ‘Opening years of the war, a\slow recovery in the second half of the war, and a sharp advance in the first year of the the 20 countries were $1,403,000,00 in peace, 1919. The total Amprts’ of 1913, then dropping to $978,000,000 in 1914, and $867,000,000 in 1815, advane. ing to. $1,510,000,000 in 1918, with a probability that the 1919 totals ‘when received “will show mearly or quite $2,000,000,000, this eharp increase in 1919 being due to the increased pur- chasing power resulting from the high prices and popular demand for the .coffee of Brdzil, the sugar of The ; in th a, - © YORI Bre- |1 digestion you have already tried sen. i i City Bank of New York. It shows | in detail the note circulation and gold reserve in each -of the 30 principal countries of the world in July 1914, November "1918, and December 1919, | utilizing the official figures of the state-banks .of the Europsan coun- tries, and in the case :0f the United States figures supplied by.the Treas- ury Department, all figures of for- eisn currency being trapsformed into United States_dollars as at the war face value of the respective rencies. The four Central Powers, Gernfny, Austria-Hungary, Turkey and Bul garia, show an advance in note cir- TRY MAGNESIA FOR . STOMACH TROUBLE It Newtralizes Stomach Acidity, Pre- vents Food Fermentation, Sour, Gassy Stomach and Acid Indigestion. Doubtless If you are a sufferer from , bismuth, da, charcoal, drugs and various digesx’; aids, .and you know these things will not cure your trouble you can obtain from practically any druggist in .either powdered or tablet form. Take a teaspoonful of the powder or two compressed tablets with a little water after your next meal and see what a difference ‘this makes. It will instantly neutralize the dangerous, harmful acid in the stomach which now causes your food to ferment and sour, making gas, wind, flatulence, heartburn and the bloated or heavy, lumpy feeling that seems to follow most everything you eat. You will find that provided you take | a little bisurated magnesia’ immediate- Iy after a meal, you can eat almost anything and emjoy it without any danger of pain or discomfort to follow, and moreover. the continued use of the bisurated magnesia cannot. injure the stomach in any way so long as there are any symptoms of acid indigestion. T T e e T e M e it e e o e e Fal CANDY SPECIALS For Dollar Day We will sell 300 wo-pound boxes of cious assorted Chocolates for £} Saturday, our Dollar Day. Salestarts 9 A. M., so be on time and get one before they are all gone. ‘AssortedKifies,lb_..........S’ eli- i 3 d e 8 o s a2 e 9¢c o sl —in.some cases do not even give reliet P 3 t B .ttl ly AE abou ;. - t befo ving up hope an cid- 5 Looks inpacant snough. seme one| ST SEARIE I Siatea” Ve hase || B Inior Eiving 3 hke S S eanut Brittle,Ib. ........... 45¢ will -say. Ye—es, perhaps it doos—|vrar, Ry Sfiatel y'::;f"::’l‘li‘ a“: {ry the effect of a little bisuraied miac- i Tl 3 - |nesia—not the ordinary commercia i works - practee; =~ "% "0 | Berenly aegeeste about Tadhogns. |LEEETE! oY o I Bitter Sweets,Ib............. 5% The profit accruing being a per- '1'5;;1'”330;1143:\!“ vear 1919 against |the pure bisurated magnesia, which 9 Chocolate Almonds, Ib. . . ... & BELL'S ICE CREAM PARLC (WHERE QUALITY COSTS NO MORE) 144 MAIN STREET N

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